The 1-step process to win every interaction from now until forever
“You only make a first impression once.” — Steve Jobs
Many years ago, I learned a technique that has helped me more times than I can count.
Most people never use this technique. They have never heard of it.
The technique is not a secret, though, and it is hardly challenging or difficult to implement.
And it is not manipulative or evil. You will not compromise any of your values (at least if you do it right) to use it.
Anyone can use this technique to win every single interaction from now until the end of time.
I have done it countless times.
This is not some magical, touchy-feely, hope and prayer. This is a technique that has helped me and other professionals tremendously and can do the same for you.
And I actually learned this technique from a successful screenwriter. I can sum it up in three words: make a fan.
But the words mean nothing without the explanation.
“The problem contains the solution.” — Michael Bierut
Many years ago, I was trying to learn as much as I could about the film industry. I had dreams of writing the great screenplay that would change the world.
My friend Dave — owner of a local equipment shop — gave me a recording of a screenwriting workshop that contained amazing advice. I loved the recording and have listened to it quite a few times.
The best piece of advice, however, was about how to pitch a screenplay.
A big part of writing a screenplay is getting someone to buy your screenplay so that a movie can be made. It does not make much sense to write a screenplay if the script never becomes a movie.
But it is hard to find a producer or company that wants to produce your script.
Pitching, from this particular screenwriter’s experience, was usually him and one or two other people from a movie studio, sitting in a room. The screenwriter has a very short period of time to “pitch” his idea.
There are so many inherent difficulties in this setup.
The deck is seriously stacked against a screenwriter in this situation.
“When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.” ― Viktor E. Frankl
In a pitch meeting, a writer cannot control what the other people are looking for.
You only have so many scripts. A certain number of ideas. When you sit at that table, you only bring what you have.
You have to pitch what you have.
So you pitch your best stuff. The best.
But you also have to hook the audience immediately.
Here is a modified example of what the writer proposed when pitching a TV episode of the hottest show on TV at the time.
The main character walks into the hospital emergency room where he works. Immediately, a man dressed in dark clothes pulls out a gun and shoots our main guy in the head.
[pause]
Wanna hear more?
Even if you have never seen the show or heard of this writer, you have to admit that most people would probably want to know more. How can a writer kill off the main character in the first 30 seconds? You want to know more, right?
A good storyteller can hook the audience with a great pitch.
But so what? You have a good story. But that’s it.
The writer talked about how sometimes your great pitch is not even what the studio is looking for at that moment.
Imagine you pitch a drama.
Sorry, we are not looking for dramas. We are really hot on westerns. Do you have any thoughts on a western?
In that moment, you either fall flat on your face, with no hope to give these listeners what they are looking for, or you pitch your best western idea.
The writer’s goal in the pitch meeting is not to sell his screenplay or story idea.
His goal was to make a fan.
Making a fan allowed him to have a successful meeting, even if his script or ideas were not what that studio was looking for that day.
The reality of this process is that people get fired, move up, move down, move laterally. But people also have long memories. Several studios had rejected this writer’s pitches previously, but then six months later the executive who listened to the pitch called him back and wanted to work together — because he moved to a different studio where the priorities changed. The executives loved the writer’s previous pitches, even if they could not hire him at that moment.
The writer had made a fan during the encounter.
If you impress people, they will remember.
Don’t worry about the short-term results. Don’t even worry about winning the meeting or the interview. Play the long game.
You should have only one goal in every interaction: make a fan.
Your goal is not to win the pitch. Your goal is not to sign a deal. Your goal is NOT to impress people with your knowledge, skills, or good looks.
All of those things might be good results, but they are not your goal.
You only have one goal in every interaction.
Make a fan.
Make. A. Fan.
That’s it. No other goals, just that one.
Redefine what you are trying to accomplish, and you will ensure success in every interaction.
Because in every interaction there are factors that you cannot control.
“Opportunities multiply as they are seized.” —Sun Tzu
If you are in a job interview, you have no idea what the interviewer is looking for. Maybe you meet the criteria, and maybe you do not. I have hired lots of people and interviewed many more. I can often tell if the person is what I am looking for within 10 minutes. Sometimes even less time than that.
So what should the interviewee do?
Make a fan.
Focus on what you can control. You can’t control what the other person is looking for, but you can control your own mindset and actions. You can control whether someone becomes a fan of you.
This may seem crazy, but I no longer think about end results when I enter new situations. I just focus on making a fan. Everything else takes care of itself.
Incredible results have followed.
From this point forward, every interview you go on will be a complete success — because you will make a fan.
During your next interview, never feel bad if you do not get the job. The interviewer is looking for something specific. And you either have it, or you don’t. It doesn’t matter: make a fan.
I guarantee they will remember you if you make a fan.
“How you do anything is how you do everything.”
Do not just think this applies to job interviews. It applies to everything.
You will win in every interaction if you make a fan.
Making a fan is a skill that is more art than science, but here are some suggestions.
Handle your business. You can’t control everything.
But you can control this: whether you make a fan or not.
Here are a few examples from my own life. I could tell a hundred stories like this.
People will be impressed not by the cards you are dealt, but by how you play them.
Even if you face tough times, tough times don’t last. Even if a situation does not go your way, you can still do one thing.
You can make a fan.
If you make a fan in every interaction, the number of your “fans” will go up every single day.
With enough fans, you will build an army of people who want you to succeed.
With an army of fans, you will rule the world.
So hurry up.
Make. A. Fan.